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What do GM bondholders get (Detroit Free Press, Bloomberg)

Bondholders of old GM to get shares in new GM shortly

BY CHRISSIE THOMPSON

DETROIT FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

Apr 6, 2011|

General Motors' pre-bankruptcy
bondholders, who have waited more than
four months to share in the automaker's
return to the stock market, will receive
shares in the new GM on or around April
21, according to a bank representing
them.

After GM exited Chapter 11 in July 2009 as
a new company, its cast-off assets
remained in bankruptcy, waiting to be sold.
Bankruptcy Court Judge Robert Gerber
signed a plan last week that Motors
Liquidation -- the name for the unwanted
assets -- will use to liquidate this year.

As part of that plan, bondholders in the old
company will trade their bonds for stock in
the new company and warrants to buy
more shares.
That stock and warrants
should arrive in bondholders' brokerage
accounts "on or about April 21," according
to a statement on the Web site of
Wilmington Trust, a bank representing
bondholders.

The bonds will be put in a pool with about
$36.4-billion worth of unsecured claims,
CRT Capital analyst Kirk Ludtke said in a
research note last week. About 10% of
GM's 1.5 billion common shares -- which
closed at $32.87 Tuesday afternoon -- will
be issued to bondholders proportionately
to the value of their bonds.

Those investors will also receive warrants
to buy another 15% of GM's stock by either
2016 or 2019. Bondholders will purchase
that extra stock by paying either $10 or
$18.33 per share.

The initial payment of stock and warrants
will be about 70% of what each bondholder
will eventually receive. The rest will be paid
out as the last claims against old GM are
paid, with most of the remainder to arrive
within three or four months. The rest could
trickle in over a year or longer.

Bondholders with questions may contact
Wilmington Trust at 866-521-0079 or
mlcguctrust@wilmingtontrust.com.

Contact Chrissie Thompson: 313-222-
8784 or cthompson@freepress.com

--------------------------------------------------

Old GM Bondholders Getting Shares in New GM May Depress Price
April 07, 2011, 12:04 AM EDT
By David Welch

April 7 (Bloomberg) -- Investors holding bonds in the old General Motors Corp. will receive stock and warrants for shares in the new General Motors Co. on April 21, an action that analysts said may depress the stock price.

Old GM, now known as Motors Liquidation Co., will give bondholders 150 million shares in GM and warrants to buy 272.8 million more shares. A trust holding the shares will distribute them directly to bondholders’ brokerage accounts on or after April 21, according to a memo distributed Wilmington Trust Inc., a money-management firm hired by the creditors’ committee.

Some of the bondholders are retail investors who may sell the shares and briefly sink GM’s stock price, said David Whiston, an analyst with Chicago-based Morningstar Inc. Investors have probably priced in the dilution, so it won’t change GM’s long-term value, he said. He has not changed his $48 a share valuation based on the release of shares to bondholders.

“I would think that there will be more selling than holding,” Whiston said. “Any sell-off in GM is a buying opportunity. Long term, I think the company is positioned very well.”

Bondholders were promised stock and warrants in the new GM to make up for some of their loss during the predecessor company’s government-backed bankruptcy. The warrants given to bondholders for new GM stock are already in the money, according to a report by Kirk Ludtke, senior vice president of CRT Capital Group, a money management firm in Stamford, Connecticut.

Warrant Release

When U.S. Bankruptcy Court releases the warrants and stock through a trust, bondholders will collectively get 136.4 million warrants for one share each at $10 a share and an equal amount at $18.33 a share, said Wilmington Trust, which is based in Wilmington, Delaware.

Owners of old GM bonds must notify Wilmington Trust by April 15 to get stock and warrants on April 21. If they notify Wilmington later, the bondholders will get their shares and warrants at a later date.

Currently, Motors Liquidation has about $30 billion in claims allowed by bankruptcy court, of which about $29 billion are from the bondholders, said a person familiar with the matter.

There may be as much as $8.8 billion in additional claims that could be allowed by the court, Ludtke said in the report.

If the approved unsecured claims exceed $35 billion, GM would have to issue up to 30 million shares, Jim Cain, a company spokesman, said in an interview. GM doesn’t expect claims to reach that amount, the company said in a regulatory filing.

The bonds issued by General Motors Corp. should recover about 30 cents on the dollar when the shares are distributed later this month, Ludtke said in a telephone interview. He expects GM’s share price to rise to $40, which implies a recovery rate of about 40 cents on the dollar, Ludtke said.

GM shares were unchanged at $32.87 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange Composite trading, down from a high of $38.98 on Jan. 7. The shares were priced at $33 for the initial public offering in November.

--Editors: Jamie Butters, Kevin Orland.

To contact the reporter on this story: David Welch in Southfield, Michigan, at dwelch12@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kevin Orland at korland@bloomberg.net.